430/ Monday, October 28, 1968 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 3 CYCLE GIRL Twin rearview mirrors—the ultimate "in" for the coed who doesn't mind tangled hair or flies in her face. Faculty responsible for chancellor choice Composition of the joint student-faculty committee to pick the top candidates for Chancellor will consist of six members of the faculty chancellor selection committee and two members of the proposed seven-man student advisory committee, Ambrose Saricks, chairman of the executive committee of the University Senate. said Friday. Rock von Ende, Abilene, Tex. graduate student and chairman of the All-Student Council (ASC), said Thursday he believed the joint committee—to be formed when both the student and faculty groups have compiled sufficient lists of candidates—would have four faculty members and two student members. Saricks said the entire faculty group would serve on the joint committee because the Kansas Board of Regents has charged the faculty committee with full responsibility for the selection of approximately five names of candidates for Chancellor. However, both the Regents and the KU faculty committee are eager to hear student views, Saricks said. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Dance symposium draws 50 persons The student advisory committee will be elected tomorrow night by the ASC, von Ende said. Application forms for committee membership are available in the ASC office, in room 105B in the Kansas Union, he said. Modern Southern racial relations portrayed in dance highlighted the 6th annual dance symposium sponsored by Tau Sigma, dance fraternity, and the physical education and recreation department at KU. The symposium was presented Saturday in Robinson Gymnasium. "Mississippi Suite," a dance portraying racial relations in the South, was presented by Tau Sigma. It featured Paul Gilbert, Seneca sophomore; Allison Clutter, Larned sophomore, and Jonas Walton, Los Angeles, Calif. sophomore. "First Love," also presented by Tau Sigma, featured Gilbert and Kristin Kessinger, Junction City sophomore. Approximately 50 persons attended the symposium for area colleges and high schools. Artists from the Lawrence area withstood cold temperatures yesterday to display their talents at the Malls Shopping Center Festival of the Arts. The artists ended the 2-day festival by donning coats and sweaters to greet art enthusiasts and collectors. Feeling that there is a revival in the color facet of print making, Bailey said color is "now more a part of the process rather than something just added on." Bailey displayed prints and sketches. He specializes in the use of color in prints. Walter Bailey, a KU graduate on the art faculty at Baker University in Baldwin, won Best of Show sweepstakes and first place in two dimensional art. He said the trend is away from "colored" prints, where the colors appear to be added, toward a "careful attention to the specific" in color. Besides silk screen printing, in which Bailey earned his thesis at KU, he works in a combination of techniques and with wood block. Artists brave cold to display work Beverly Frazier, Rt. 4, who studied sculpture at KU, spent the two days of the festival beginning a clay portrait sculpture of a friend. Uptown VI 3-5755 Working from memory and some photographs, rather than from a live model which she prefers, she dabbed slowly at the clay bust as Sunday's chilly winds blew. Failing Hair NEW YORK (UPI) — The average person loses from 12 to 25 hairs a day, according to the Steiner of London salon in New York. Generally, however, this is not cause for alarm, or even noticeable, since many of them are replaced by new growth, and since the total number of hairs in the average full growth of hair of an adult is about 120,000. Calling herself a lazy sculptor, she said, "Clay is perfect material for people who are not constantly at work." Winners in the festival were: Two dimensional art: Walter Bailey, first; Ann Nunley, second; Craig Boyer, third; Ann Gali, honorable mention. Don Hoffman, art editor of the Kansas City Star, judged the show which was sponsored by the Malls Shopping Center. Three dimensional art: Dick Luster, first; Jerry Bryan, second; Clarence Teed, third; Richard Mawdsley, honorable mention.